DEA PowerPoint, The Science & Health Impacts of Climate Change

DEA with Professor Garnaut

Doctors for the Environment Australia Management Committee met with Professor Ross Garnaut author of the Garnaut Climate Change Review in Adelaide, November 5 2009.Read more

Things To Do

How to make your household and business carbon neutral Click here. A charter for all medical practitioners by Bill Castleden

DEA in the Community

GreenClinics

This initiative by ACF and DEA assists doctors and practice managers to identify simple changes they can make in their clinics to save energy and water, reduce waste, and help their patients and communities to live more sustainable and healthy lives. download...

Public Transport is a Climate Change and Health Issue

To read DEA's "A Public Transport and Green City Manifesto for the Federal Election" Click Here and to read "Moving Australians Sustainably, transport policy in the national interest" courtesy of the Public Transport Users Association. Click Here

Climate Change and Health Poster

Climate change happens when the earth heats up because of too much carbon dioxide and other ‘greenhouse gases’ in the atmosphere.

Climate change is already happening. Temperatures and sea levels are rising and rainfall is changing. The CSIRO predicts that by 2030, annual average temperatures in Australia may be up to 2.0°C higher than in 1990.

"Climate change is the most severe problem we are facing today, more serious even than the threat of terrorism”.

Sir David King, Chief Scientist, British Government.

This may not sound like much but many species and ecosystems are very sensitive to small changes – just as small temperature changes in the human body can be very serious. Most scientists believe that just a temperature rise of just 2 degrees would trigger dangerous consequences for living systems.

Climate change is also likely to bring more extreme weather, such as heatwaves, severe storms and floods and increased risk of bushfires in some areas. These changes are expected to take their toll on the health of the population (particularly older people).

We are changing the climate

An overwhelming majority of scientists agree that our activities are responsible for most of the recent and predicted climate changes. We produce the greenhouse gases causing climate change by burning fossil fuels for electricity and transport. Electricity production accounts for 35% of Australia’s greenhouse emissions.

“Climate change caused by the release of greenhouse pollution will affect human health on a scale not previously encountered by human society”.

Mukesh Haikerwal, President, AMA and Ian Lowe, President, ACF

In Australia climate change may mean:

Some harmful diseases carried by mosquitoes could survive in more areas
At present, mosquito-borne diseases such as dengue fever and malaria can survive in very few areas of Australia. The expected climate changes would make new regions susceptible to diseases – placing many more people at risk. If we do nothing about climate change, by the end of this century the dengue virus may be able to be spread as far south as Sydney.

More risk from severe weather events
More deaths, illness and injuries due to severe weather events. In particular heat-related deaths could double by 2020*.

Greater risk of infections carried by food and water
It is predicted that the warmer temperatures and increased variability of rainfall will mean that food poisoning and ‘gastro’ due to infections carried by food and water will become more common and more severe.

Changing rainfall patterns and more strain on our water supply in some parts of Australia
Reliable access to clean water is vital for our health and for food production. Climate change may bring longer and more frequent droughts to southern Australia, increasing the strain on water resources and stress on communities. South-west WA has already seen significant drying since the 1970’s, partly due to climate change.

* Assuming projected population growth in the elderly

We have solutions to avoid dangerous climate change.

Most scientists now think that a two degree rise in Earth’s average temperature would trigger adverse consequences for living systems. So while some climate change is unavoidable, but it is vital that we avoid this dangerous level of climate change.